1
The social pattern of knowledge workers:
myth and reality
by
Sergio Bologna
Humanities Conference
Prato, 20th-22nd July 2004
It is generally aknowledged that the term “knowledge worker” was first used by Peter Drucker in his 1959 book “Landmarks of Tomorrow”. In the following years hundreds and hundreds of definitions were offered in an effort to give the term some sense. In 1996 the Drucker-Nakagauchi Dialog was published with the title “Drucker on Asia”. It is interesting to read Drucker’s autobiographical reconstruction of the different steps in his evolution from an employee of an export-cotton firm to a “knowledge worker”: the itinerary he describes is completely different from the approach to education and work of a typical knowledge worker and also from the approach to education he proposes to applicants for a career as knowledge workers. Born in Vienna to a family of “civil servants, professors, lawyers and physicians”, his education was marked by the pedagogic philosophy of the allgemeine Bildung. What Allgemeine Bildung means has been explained by Drucker himself in a lecture he gave at the Kennedy School of Government in May 1994
During the last two hundred years at least in the West (and since about that time in Japan as well) an educated person was someone who shared a common stock of formal knowledge what the Germans called Allgemeine Bildung and the English (and following them, the nineteenth- century Americans) called the liberal arts.
1. More precisely, the term allgemeine Bildung means an education based on commonly accepted schooling programs, pedagogical values and pedagogical rules, whose center is the secondary school, the gymnasium and the lyceum. The school systems in the German and in the Habsburg Empires at the turn of the twenthieth Century show large similarities. The cursus studiorum of young people aged 14 to 17 – the central Bildungsjahre – was clearly defined and imbued students with both basic instruments of learning and fundamental elements of knowledge, necessary for their life as citizens. What still remained undefined and unclear was the organisation and structure of the University. The great German-speaking economists of the past century came from the law faculties (others, like Franz Oppenheimer, from medicine). Sociology as an autonomous discipline did not yet exist. Drucker – enrolled in 1927 in a law faculty - moved to the U.S. ten years later. He belongs to the second generation of German-speaking intellectuals who escaped from Hitler’s dictatorship after 1933 or from Austria’s Anschluss after 1938. These “refugees scholars” gave support to the renewal of American culture, especially in the socio-economic fields[1] In some cases these German speaking scholars made an important contribution to the renewal of educational institution in the U.S., for example at the New School of Social Research in New York and inside the New School with the so called “University in Exile”. An historian of this emigration, Lewis Coser, has said that
only a few refugee sociologists made significant contributions in their adopted country... they served as transmission belts for sociological knowledge, especially sociological theory[2]
Having found many obstacles to their integration in the American academic world, they taught in colleges or undergraduate institutions, leading Coser, to praise them as the
unsung heroes of American higher education.
Peter Drucker belongs to the few, who “made significant contributions”. What does matter, is that the approach to the education of a knowledge worker today, the educational offer he is faced with, the educational philosophy commonly accepted are not only completely different but quite the opposite from the philosophy of the allgemeineBildung, where the main concern of educators was to help pupils to integrate the different disciplines and knowledges they had learned into an unitary “mind set”, in an unitary selfsustaining complexity .
Today education is (must be) ultra-specialized, pragmatic, technology-oriented. Education is education for problem-solving, to learn simplification, to fight complexity. I agree with Michael Menser and Stanley Aronowitz, who said in the opening essay of the book “Technoscience and cyberculture” that
to complicate is to be transgressive, to ‘mix things up’ to ontologically complicate things so as to break down ‘disciplinary’ boundaries which have abstractly extracted and com(de)partimentalized to such a degree that the objects of study have been ‘emptied out’, casting nature, culture and technology as closed systems or pure objects where each one brackets off the other[3]
Trying to explain what is meant with “com(de)partimentalization”, the authors add
we deploy this admittedly unwieldy term in order to stress that academic specialization takes the institutional form of departments whose field of inquiry compartimentalize the objects of the inquiry so as to prevent communication between these specialized fields. Thus, departments for the most part are walled-off compartments which methodologically secure and cordon off their objects making interdisciplinary access illegitimate or at least taboo such that one is forced to adopt the methods for a departmental domain in order to have legitimate access to its objects[4]
2. In what historical context did the commonly accepted term of “knowledge worker” reappear at the end of the Eighties? The context is the “new economy”, the so-called information society and computer technology, in a political context marked by the collapse of the communist regimes and by the general acceptance there is no way out from the capitalist system. The term was could be found years before but only at the beginning of the Nineties did it become popular. Thomas Steward, an editor of the magazine “Fortune”, published a short cover story entitled “Brainpower” in June 1991. When his 1996 book entitled “Intellectual Capital” appeared in print; he reminded readers that five years before
There weren’t many of us interested on the subject
1991 was also the year that Robert Reich’s “The Work of Nations” was published. The term “symbolic analysts” he proposes there raised curiosity but never became as popular as “knowledge worker”. According to Reich “symbolic analysts” are people who
simplify reality into abstract images that can be rearranged, juggled, experimented with, communicated to other specialists, and then, eventually, transformed back into reality
Reich’s book merits praise because it re-officialized the term “work”, a term for many years associated with “social conflict” within the deep soul of the capitalist culture. Since the beginning of the Seventies, when the first robots were massively introduced in the labor-intensives factories and the main concern in firms seemed to be the reduction of work and the substitution of human labor with intelligent machinery, the term “work” has assumed the meaning of “world of the past”. Sociological investigation abandoned the field of labor complexity and rapidly joined the new dream of “artificial intelligence”. Rifkin’s book on the future of a workless free-time society (highly praised by the italian left at that time), is a typical example of transforming an attack upon labor conditions into a dream of liberation. In this cultural context, bringing a figure of a human worker – the “knowledge worker” – back to the center of attention sounds a bit revolutionary.
3. What is the social context in which the new figure of worker is located? The social context, the human milieu, where knowledge can be developed and knowledge worker exist, is the firm, the enterprise.[5] The firm is not only the universe of demand, able to satisfy every supply of knowledge workers, it seems a space dedicated to produce knowledge, “the ecosystem of knowlege”. Not in reality, but certainly in the literature, the figure of the “knowledge worker” is not associated with many situations where knowledge (creative or specialized) may be exerted or applied (political institutions, children’s or old men’s care etc.) but rather is associated exclusively with a profit-making organization: the firm.
In their article “Knowledge and the Firm” (1999), published in “Managerial Finance”, Richard J. Bauer, Jr.,and Julie R. Dahlquist, make a distinction between “data, information, and knowledge” reminiscent of the taxonomy first proposed by other scholars (Holsapple and Winston). This taxonomy identified
seven types of knowledge: descriptive, procedural, reasoning, derived, linguistic, assimilate, and presentation. Knowledge workers – they continue - are said to engage in the following nine activities: procuring, storing, organizing, maintaining, creating, analyzing, presenting, distributing, and applying knowledge (...) Descriptive knowledge is mainly factual knowledge about items such as: prices of production inputs, the firm’s sales volume and inventory, competitor’s sales and inventory, etc. Procedural knowledge is algorithmic knowledge about task performance such as manufacturing quality control or customer order-taking. Reasoning knowledge includes both inferential and deductive reasoning procedures, and specifies how conclusions should be reached from a given set of inputs. Derived knowledge is knowledge that the firm has created from the knowledge that has been gathered. Linguistic knowledge is concerned with the vocabulary and usage of terminology within the firm. Presentation knowledge concerns the display and communication of existing knowledge. Assimilative knowledge is in many ways, the most important.This is knowledge about what additional knowledge the firm should collect.
As for people involved in such processes, they might logically be linked to threegeneric categories: knowledge builders, knowledge stewards and knowledge appliers
“Knowledge builders procure, analyze, or create knowledge. These activities would all add to existing knowledge bases. Knowledge stewards store, organize, maintain, present, and distribute knowledge. These activities relate to the preservation and dissemination of existing knowledge. Finally, knowledge appliers use the knowledge base to perform tasks.”
The figure of the “knowledge worker” is associated with the idea of autonomy, independence, participation in the decision-making process, with team work within decentralized structures: the “knowledge worker” is well-paid. Observing these features of “knowledge workers” one can believe that they have been drawn to cancel the image of the work in fordist society, characterized by alienation, frustration and lack of freedom.
Presenting the book “The future of work”, by MIT Professor Robert Malone, Robert Weismann of Globe Newspaper writes
In the future, high-tech and knowledge-based businesses will be run as loose hierarchies or self-managed democracies. Skilled workers will organize, disband, and regroup around different assembly projects, much as film and construction workers do today. Even the systems of cars will be designed by competing teams of freelancers (2004).
Many authors have emphasized the great “divide” between pre- and post-knowledge society.
What is even more astonishing and even less precedented - Peter Drucker said - is the rise of the group which is fast replacing both history’s traditional groups and the groups of industrial society; the group which is fast becoming the center of gravity of the working population; the group, incidentally, which is fast becoming the largest single group (though by no means a majority) in the work force and population of post-industrial society and in every developed country: knowledge workers (...) Knowledge workers, eventhoughonly a large minority of the work force, already give the emerging knowledge society its character, its leadership, its central challenges and its social profile. They may not be the ruling class of the knowledge society, but they already are its leading class. In their characteristics, their social positions, their values and their expectations, they differ fundamentally from any group in history that has ever occupied the leading, let along the dominant position.[6]
4. Moreover, most of the available literature considers the “knowledge worker” from the point of view of their management. The main concern is: “what are the best management practices of ‘knowledge workers’”? The central question for their management is the measurement of performances trough objective parameters for merit pay. A very rich review of the literature about the management of knowledge workers can be found in the article “Knowledge workers exploring the link among performance rating, pay and motivational aspects”, by Alan D. Smith and William T. Rupp[7]. Linked to this review are the findings of a short empirical study:
An obvious result of the present study was the discrepancy between performance rating and merit rating among knowledge workers – 58 percent of the respondents stated that they have been subject to a merit increase that did not coincide with their performance rating. Generally, as would be expected, high performance ratings are combined with low merit increases. However, a small percentage of participants reported receiving a low performance rating and a high merit increase. As anticipated,
the results of the survey confirms that the de-coupling of performance ratings and merit increases is a common practice today in modern knowledge-based environments. This isapparently evident by the relatively many responses to the open-ended questions. The majority of respondents did not feel that their merit increase was based upon their performance rating. (...) people work harder because of the increased involvement and commitment that comes from having more control and say in their work; people work smarter because they are encouraged to build skills and competence; and people work more responsibly because more responsibility is placed in hands of employees rather down in the organization” (...) An interesting twist in the findings is the difference between men and women in relation to attitudes and motivation when presented with a high performance rating and low merit increase. Women were found to be more positive than men in this type of situation. One implication is that women are not primarily motivated by money. Recognition is an important factor. This may be a result of the traditional struggle for a woman to be recognized in a traditionally perceived male-dominated world.
Managing “knowledge workers” seems to be a difficult task not only in the measurement of performances, but also in recruiting a workforce and training it. The traditional approach to the “management of human resources” has been re-assessed, re-examined. The question is whether this reassessment also involves “industrial relations”. I haven’t investigated this point in particular; in the literature that I have examined, examples of unionisation amongst knowledge workers are rare and examples of struggles even rarer. It seems to me, however, that if on one side the problem of industrial relations has been emptied out through the ideology of “working in democratic structures” or “working in a society of freelancers”, on the other side the unions’ approach to the problem of labor in the new economy is completely inadequate. In spite of ideological overemphasis, the capitalist culture of the last fifteen years was heavily engaged in a substantial intellectual effort of rethinking labor. On the union side nothing happened, except complaints about the growing flexibilization of work.
5. “Knowledge workers” are unthinkable without an information society. The figure of the “knowledge worker” is inseparable from a specific technology. If the idea of a person provided with formal education and working with intellectual resources has always existed, the indissolubility of “knowledge worker” and computer language bind this figure to a specific historical period, the Nineties. The same happened with the “mass worker”, tied to the appearance of the assembly line (even if the term was coined fifty years later, shortly before the decline of the mass worker).
The Internet era brought into common acceptance the idea that computer-based knowledge can be acquired without formal education, that computer language is easy to learn and generally accessible. Easy access to knowledge is a fundamental factor in the ideology of the new economy, and of course of the “knowledge worker”. The image of the information society is: more democracy through working and learning, and that class-conditioned and revenue-conditioned inequalities could disappear in the information society. In fact my experience with “knowledge workers” in the consulting sector – the typical sector of “knowledge work”, just as the automobile sector was typical for the “mass worker” – is that people have learned computer languages by themselves. The great majority of IT specialists that I have met in my experience were self-taught, having begun their familiarity with computers as playstations. That computer language is easy to learn, and that very young people can reach a high level of specialisation is not a distorted ideological assumption, it is a reality (or it has been so for the first generation of computer users). The question is whether even a deep knowledge of computer techniques is sufficient to give an applicant more chance of employment in an enterprise as a knowledge worker. In the recruiting of “knowledge workers” formal education, postgraduate studies, plays a much more important role than IT competencies. Formal education is class- and revenue-conditioned, and postgraduate studies are reserved for a small élite. So the theory of universal accessibility of computer science is another feature of the “democratic, egalitarian, inter-ethnic” image of the new economy. Nevertheless, the U.S. Public Administration recognized very early that the Internet civilisation’s challenge to the established education system would be hard. Take the case of learning mathematics. In a document of the Mathematical Sciences Education Board, National Research Council, we find the following statement: